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Why all of a sudden tech companies are not being favorable to their users?

YouTube disallowing adblockers, Reddit charging for API usage, Twitter blocking non-registered users. These events happen almost at the same time. Is this one of the effects of the tech bubble burst?

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  • It's not anything new and nothing "all of a sudden", unfortunately. Facebook, Tumbler, Google - all done stuff like that before. Even for Reddit this is not the first protest blackout and not the first time they treat users and mods like garbage.

    It simply is now happening to the apps and services you (and I) use daily, so it hits closer home.

    All modern stairs are built on the same terrible foundation: Attract users, no matter how much money you lose. Once you feel strong, introduce fees, ads, hike the prices and try to regulate years of financial loss.

    Happened like clockwork, and companies going public are a clear sign it's just around the corner. (Kind of like any free mobile app will ask you for a 5 star review, just before introducing monetization schemes)

    • All modern stairs are built on the same terrible foundation: Attract users, no matter how much money you lose.

      I have sustainable stairs at home which have plateaued at two users. Not all stairs.

      • Lol startups Leaving the error where it is. Editing still messy for me on Lemmy.

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